Executive functions (EFs) play a crucial role in higher cognition, influencing life skills and effective global functioning or dysfunctional developmental trajectories. Despite their significance, EFs assessment primarily relies on tests designed for detecting clinically-significant deficits, limiting their applicability to physiological aging or for profiling supposedly healthy populations. This study introduces the Executive Function Tool-Task (EF/t-t), a screening tool potentially spanning emerging adulthood to elderly age. In a pilot study involving 68 healthy volunteers, we firstly explored its informativity and potential. The EF/t-t includes subtests on verbal learning, memory, cognitive flexibility, attention, and inhibitory control. Partial correlation analyses, accounting for age and education, revealed moderate-to-strong coefficients between subtests, indicating good internal consistency. Also, cluster analysis allowed us to parse out three latent performance profiles. Current findings hint at the potential of the EF/t-t for complementing cognitive screening in presumably preserved adults and elderly people, offering consistent neurocognitive profiling of EFs.
Crivelli, D., Balconi, M., A Computerized Tool for Neurocognitive Assessment of Executive Functions in Adults and Elderlies: Pilot Testing of the Executive Function Tool-Task (EF/t-t), <<TPM. TESTING, PSYCHOMETRICS, METHODOLOGY IN APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY>>, 2024; 31 (3): 397-413. [doi:10.4473/TPM31.3.9] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/297118]
A Computerized Tool for Neurocognitive Assessment of Executive Functions in Adults and Elderlies: Pilot Testing of the Executive Function Tool-Task (EF/t-t)
Crivelli, Davide
;Balconi, Michela
2024
Abstract
Executive functions (EFs) play a crucial role in higher cognition, influencing life skills and effective global functioning or dysfunctional developmental trajectories. Despite their significance, EFs assessment primarily relies on tests designed for detecting clinically-significant deficits, limiting their applicability to physiological aging or for profiling supposedly healthy populations. This study introduces the Executive Function Tool-Task (EF/t-t), a screening tool potentially spanning emerging adulthood to elderly age. In a pilot study involving 68 healthy volunteers, we firstly explored its informativity and potential. The EF/t-t includes subtests on verbal learning, memory, cognitive flexibility, attention, and inhibitory control. Partial correlation analyses, accounting for age and education, revealed moderate-to-strong coefficients between subtests, indicating good internal consistency. Also, cluster analysis allowed us to parse out three latent performance profiles. Current findings hint at the potential of the EF/t-t for complementing cognitive screening in presumably preserved adults and elderly people, offering consistent neurocognitive profiling of EFs.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.